Welcome to Online Bible Devotions. Here you will find more than a year’s worth of free devotion. Each month is devoted to one Biblical theme and studies that theme throughout. In most cases, you’ll start at the beginning of the Bible on a topic and work your way through to the end.

You’ll also find on this site a section that is dedicated to love and marriage (in addition to a month of devotions on love.) Visit the section 40 Days in Love for a walkthrough on what the Bible instructs us on love and how it is best applied to marriage.

You’ll find other helpful resources to study the Bible. While we have many topical Bible studies on our parent site, Spreading Light, here you’ll reading lists that will allow you to read through the Bible in one year.

Finally, if you enjoy the devotions on this site and would like to have them offline, either for your own personal use or to give to a friend or family member, all twelve months of devotions have been incorporated into a book Devotions for Life.

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Most Christians recognize the fact that it is important to read the Bible. Many make it a goal to read more of the Bible than in the past whether that is the result of a New Year’s resolution or in response to a sermon. Every year many Christians make it a goal to read through the Bible in one year and they start at Genesis and just work their way through.

If your goal is to read through the Bible in one year, it is certainly admirable. But how should you pace yourself? How many chapters should you read each day? What if you want to avoid the problem of getting bogged down in a certain section of the Bible?

As a rule, reading three chapters of the Bible each day will get you through most of the Bible in one year. There are 1189 chapters in the Bible and if you read three a day it will take you 396 days, or thirteen months, to make it through the entire book. Of course some chapters are quite short and some will take a longer time to read but for the most part an average of three chapters a day will get you through the Bible in a year.

If you want to read right through the Bible chapter after chapter, book after book, you really don’t need a Bible reading plan. What you will discover doing this however is that in late January(assuming you start at the beginning of the year) you’ll reach the end of Exodus with lots of details about the tabernacle. You’ll then spend a couple of weeks going through the laws of Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy. And this is where people get bogged down and give up.

Of course all parts of the Bible are important. But that doesn’t mean that all parts are equally exciting to read or easy to understand. After a week or more about details of the tabernacle, temple, or ceremonial laws you’ll probably lose focus. It’s ok to admit it because it’s natural.

This is why a Bible reading plan is important to have. It will break up the parts that most people find boring or tedious and mix them together with other parts of the Bible. Of course you’ll still read through all of those parts, but you won’t necessarily do so day after day after day. Instead you might read a chapter about the tabernacle, a chapter from Psalms, and a chapter from Ephesians.

Or you might prefer a Bible reading plan that is based around themes. That means that every Monday you might read passages about the grace of God and Tuesday you might be reading about salvation.

The purpose of a Bible reading plan is to make it as easy as possible for anyone to achieve their goal of reading through the Bible. The purpose of this site is to give you options with your Bible reading plans. If we can help you read more of the Bible, then we have achieved our goal. Browse through the Bible reading plans on your right and select the one that is right for you.

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“Men of Galilee,” they said, “why do you stand here looking into the sky? This same Jesus, who has been taken from you into heaven, will come back in the same way you have seen him go into heaven.”

As we celebrate the first coming of Christ as a baby in a manger, we should remember that Jesus is coming back. Jesus fulfilled His mission of the forgiveness of our sins but He has yet to reign on David’s throne and fulfill other prophecies of the Old Testament.

There have been many over the years who claimed to be the second coming of Christ but they can easily be disputed. Jesus will return very visibly just as He left this earth.

We should not get caught up in the debate over when Jesus is returning. Jesus gave us signs of the end of the age and by examining those signs people from every generation have believed that Christ could return in their lifetime.

What we do know is that Christ’s return is imminent. When Jesus said that He was returning soon, it meant that it could occur at any time. All we know for sure is that we are one day closer to His return than we were the day before.

In the meantime, we shouldn’t live our lives any differently. We should love one another as if Christ were returning today. We should seek the lost as if they had only one chance to hear the gospel.

Jesus is coming back. We don’t know when but it doesn’t matter. We should look forward to that day because regardless when it is, we will see Jesus face to face one day.

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Then a voice came from heaven, “I have glorified it, and will glorify it again.”

Glory is a very abstract concept. We can’t really picture it. Unlike justice or righteousness it’s difficult to describe or even recognize it when we see it. We know when a righteous act has taken place. We can see when justice has been done. But what does glory look like?

To glorify something is to exalt or revere it. It is done as an act of praise or thanksgiving. We glorify Christ when we pray in His name. We also glorify Him when we gather to worship or tell others about the gospel.

Glorification happens in many forms. Even God can glorify His name and that of Christ. In doing so He causes others to bring glory to Him.

While glory is still difficult to truly define, we do it often. Whatever we do that brings honor to God and causes others to reflect upon His goodness is glorifying. We don’t have to think about it or fully understand it to take part in it.

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Therefore, since we have a great high priest who has gone through the heavens, Jesus the Son of God, let us hold firmly to the faith we profess. For we do not have a high priest who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses, but we have one who has been tempted in every way, just as we are—yet was without sin.

It is easy to look upon pastors as being disconnected from the world. Most are not working in the everyday world but instead spend all day in a sort of church bubble. While it would be unfair to say that pastors do not understand the temptations that Christians face in the “real world” the perception is certainly present in many churches.

Jesus lived His life in the real world. He spent much of his time with tax collectors, prostitutes, and other sinners. In the process He was tempted in every way imaginable but still did not fall victim to that temptation.

Jesus is able to sympathize with our weaknesses because He has walked in our shoes. It is for this reason that He makes the perfect high priest. He does not expect anything from us that we are incapable of doing.

Jesus knows what is best for us because He has been here with us. While it is hard to live the Christian life at times, we should remember that Jesus does not ask anything from us that He didn’t already do. Of course we will fail at times because we are sinful. But this is where Jesus as high priest comes in again. Jesus is at the right hand of the Father asking for our forgiveness because He knows how hard it is to live our life.

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They all ate the same spiritual food and drank the same spiritual drink; for they drank from the spiritual rock that accompanied them, and that rock was Christ.

In the desert, Moses was told to speak to a rock and water would flow out of it. Instead, in anger he struck the rock and was punished by being unable to enter the Promised Land.

This seems like a very arbitrary punishment, especially considering all of the good things that Moses did. However the rock was symbolic of Christ and by striking the rock, Moses struck Christ. In that instance, as is discussed in the passage in 1 Corinthians, Jesus is the rock who is a provider of needs.

Jesus is the rock in another sense in the parable of the wise and foolish builders. The wise man built his house upon the rock and the foolish one built his house upon the sand. When the storms came, the house on the sand was destroyed while the house on the rock stood firm.

Jesus is our rock and our foundation. If our life is built soundly on the foundation of Christ, we will be able to weather the storms of life. Those whose life is centered around money, popularity, sex, or anything else will find their life crumble when that foundation doesn’t hold together in the storms of life.

It is good to remember that Christ provides for our needs. It is also good to remember that He will see us through the storms of life that come our way.

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